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 Nice things MEND, PANDEF said about Osinbajo after meeting at Villa

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Elders and leaders from the Niger Delta have backed down on their November ultimatum given to the federal government over the likely failure to have their 16-point demand met.
The change of mind followed a meeting with Acting President Yemi Osinbajo Thursday.
Elder statesman, Edwin Clark who led the the Niger Delta leaders under the aegis of the Pan Niger Delta Front, PANDEF, announced the decision in Abuja,
Clark also said they had an excellent meeting with. Osinbajo, adding “the discussion was very honest, truthful and forthright. We are very very satisfied”.
Mr. Clark, who had on Monday given the Federal Government up to November 1, 2017 to meet the 16-point demand made by PANDEF on November 1, 2016, said after the meeting that there is no more ultimatum.
“We agreed on many things. They came with their own address, the ministers all spoke, presented their cases and at the end, the Acting President rounded it up.
“We saw his genuineness and forthrightness; he is a gentleman. We are satisfied. We have agreed to work together and the issue of dialogue must take place,” he said.
Clark said the people of Niger Delta should know that their leaders were able to discuss the regions’ 16-point agenda as well as “government’s 20-point agenda and we are all satisfied. We all agreed that everyone should maintain peace”.
According to him,  several leaders from the Niger Delta region, including members of the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta, MEND, were part of the meeting.
“Jomo Gbomo does not exist as a human being, he uses a ghost name, a fake name.,” he said of MEND’s spokesman whi discredited PANDEF recently.
“Other organizations were here. I am the leader of the Niger Delta and every leader you can think of from Cross River to Ondo State were all here today,” Clark said.
Speaking earlier, the Minister of State for Petroleum, Ibe Kachikwu, told reporters that the meeting discussed how far the government had gone in implementing the 16-point agenda of PANDEF.
The group, among other requests, asked for  the establishment of a maritime university, relocation of oil and gas companies to the Niger Delta, as well as allocation of oil blocs to people from area.
Mr. Kachikwu said ” several issues relating to the universities, the development of the region, amnesty programme, NDDC operations in the Niger Delta were discussed. It was very exhaustive, we looked at the 16-point agenda,” he said.
The petroleum minister said the atmosphere in the meeting was calm and friendly.
“They did in fact pledge their loyalty and their willingness to continue to work with us,” he said.

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